Pralle v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

178 N.E. 371, 346 Ill. 58
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1931
DocketNo. 19862. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 178 N.E. 371 (Pralle v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pralle v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 178 N.E. 371, 346 Ill. 58 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This cause is here on writ of certiorari to review a judgment of the Appellate Court reversing without remandment a judgment of the superior court of Cook county in favor of plaintiff in error in the sum of $11,197.25 on an alleged contract of accident insurance. Plaintiff in error’s original declaration and the first two amended counts filed charge that defendant in error, through its agent, orally promised to insure John H. Pralle, husband of plaintiff in error, against accidents "until and pending acceptance or rejection by it of an application for insurance * * * and until the issuance of a policy by said defendant or until said application has been rejected by said defendant.” The declaration then charges the accidental death of John H. Pralle by a motor vehicle. To this declaration common counts were added. Pleas and replications thereto were filed. At the time of the trial the plaintiff in error filed an additional count, alleging that on April 14, 1925, her husband, the deceased, entered into an oral contract of insurance with the defendant through its agent, Ernest Webber, who had apparent authority to make the contract; that this contract provided that the defendant would pay to the plaintiff $10,000 in case John H. Pralle was accidentally killed at any time within one year from that date, and that the proposition made by the defendant was accepted by Pralle and the annual premium of $63 was paid in full. Later another additional count was filed, wherein plaintiff in error alleged the making of a contract between her husband and the defendant through its agent, Webber, by which, in consideration of the payment of the annual premium of $63, which was paid in full, the defendant “would write up and deliver within a reasonable time a policy dated and taking effect for one year.” This count alleges that the agent at that time presented to Pralle a form of application which the latter signed but did not read and did not know the contents of it. To these various counts a plea of general issue was filed and special pleas alleging that the application was not approved and no policy was issued; denying authority of Webber to make the promises alleged in the declaration, and alleging that the contract of insurance declared upon could not lawfully be issued under the statutes of the State of Illinois. At the close of plaintiff in error’s evidence, and at the close of all the evidence, defendant in error moved the court to instruct the jury to find the issues for the defendant. These motions were denied. The Appellate Court held, on review of the record, that the superior court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to find the issues for the defendant.

This court may not weigh the evidence on controverted issues of fact, and in reviewing the ruling of the Appellate Court on a motion to instruct the jury the evidence tending to establish the plaintiff’s claim must be viewed in its light most favorable to that claim. The evidence on the part of plaintiff in error tends to show that the agent, Webber, visited Pralle at the latter’s home on the evening of April 15, 1925, and told him that if he would pay the total annual premium of $63, sign an application blank and give Webber his age, he, Webber, would fill out the application and that Pralle would receive the protection of the insurance at once. Plaintiff in error’s witnesses testified that the premium was paid by check and no receipt or other paper was delivered to Pralle at that time; that Webber said he did not have any “binding receipts” with him but would bring one the next day. She also offered in evidence, as proving the authority of Webber to make such a contract of insurance, the instructions issued by the defendant in error to its agents. In these instructions it appears that the agent is told that “whenever possible the full premium should be collected with the application, and in such cases binding receipts should be issued to furnish immediate protection, subject, of course, to acceptance of application.” The instructions to agents also include the provision that the same binding receipt that is used for ordinary life insurance should be used in connection with accident and health insurance. The agent is again told: “Every effort should be made to collect the full first premium when the application is written, and when this is done, the policy, if issued, will take effect from the date of the application * * * where the full first premium has been collected in advance and a binding receipt has been issued. However, the policy, when ready for delivery, must be delivered to the applicant irrespective of the state of his health at that time, as in such cases the insurance is effective from the date of the binding receipt and the insured is entitled to possession of the policy.” Plaintiff in error’s evidence is that no binding receipt was given Pralle.

Defendant in error offered the testimony of the agent, Webber, who identified the application signed by Pralle and stated that he turned it, together with the premium paid, over to the defendant in error at its district office in Chicago. He testified that before the application was signed by Pralle, he, Webber, read the questions to him and wrote down the answers; that Pralle gave him a check for the premium and that the witness gave him a receipt therefor, which he tore off the bottom of the application. A copy of a -so-called “binding receipt” was introduced in evidence on the testimony of Webber that it was the same form of receipt as that given by him to Pralle. This receipt bore the following language: “No insurance is in force upon the application unless and until a policy is issued thereon and delivered in accordance with its terms.” The application signed by Pralle was introduced in evidence. It also contains the above quoted language. Ernest Ingram, district manager for defendant in error, testified that it was his business to go over the applications, and if satisfied with the assistant manager’s report on them would sign the application as manager, with the following statement: “Application reviewed and recommended.” He testified that he reviewed this application and sent it in to the home office, but before mailing it he learned of Pralle’s death and did not sign the statement recommending the issuance of the policy. He testified that he had satisfied himself from the report of the assistant manager that the policy should issue, and that the only reason he did not sign the recommendation was that he had learned of Pralle’s death. It is not disputed that the policy was not issued.

It appears that on appeal to the Appellate Court, plaintiff in error, who was appellee in that court, raised the point that the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict was not before that court because the bill of exceptions showed no motion for a new trial and order overruling the same. Leave was asked and granted to file in that court an amended record containing an amended bill of exceptions and an order approving the same by the trial court. The Appellate Court also granted plaintiff in error leave to file her bill of exceptions to the order of approval of the amendment by the trial court and a motion to strike the amended bill of exceptions. This motion was denied, and it is here urged that the Appellate Court erred in permitting defendant in error to file an amended bill of exceptions and in refusing to strike same.

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Bluebook (online)
178 N.E. 371, 346 Ill. 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pralle-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-ill-1931.